The Province

SIMPLY MAYHEM

Here’s a look at some notable NHL playoff games from the month

- LANCE HORNBY Stanley Cup memories

With hockey on hold this spring, Postmedia combed the files for some of the NHL’s most unusual/eventful playoff games.

Today we take a look at the merry and often hairy month of May. PICTURE FROM ORR-BIT May 10, 1970

The great Bobby Orr’s legend had a small assist from Ray Lussier.

You won’t find the latter in the NHL Official Guide and Record Book, but try the staff photograph­ers list of the old Boston Record-American.

As Game 4 of the final went to overtime and the Bruins took aim at their first Cup since 1941, Lussier changed from his roomy position near the Zamboni door in the Bruins

zone, figuring the money shot would be in the crowded Blues’ end with other lensmen.

Luckily, the competitio­n had vacated his key rinkside spot — for the beer stand according to legend — so it was Lussier snapping Orr in mid air directing in Derek Sanderson’s puck as Noel Picard tripped him.

The Cup-winning photograph came to symbolize the Bruins rise to power and was the template for Orr’s cur

rent statue outside TD Garden.

“A spectacula­r goal by a spectacula­r player,” summed up Boston coach Harry Sinden. AU REVOIR, JEAN May 18, 1971

This exit by a multi-Stanley Cup winner will be hard to top.

Jean Beliveau carried the trophy into the visitors room in Chicago Stadium after a Game 7 win, as the Canadiens franchise scoring leader and as the league’s alltime playoff points holder in his record-tying 12th year in the final. From the first Habs player to sign a $100,000 contract in 1953, he retired a few months shy of his 40th birthday, his No. 4 immediatel­y put away by the club.

“I always believed a public person should retire early rather than too late,” Beliveau said. “Some are not in position to do this, but 1971 provided me with the perfect time.

“I wanted to retire the previous season, but (manager) Sam Pollock asked me to play another year to help the team through a transition to younger players (who would help secure five more Cups in the decade).”

But ’71 was not a smooth ride. The Hawks led the final 2-0 and when anglophone coach Al McNeil benched Henri Richard for a Game 5 loss, the latter called him incompeten­t and even death threats against the coach ensued. The team seemed to be falling apart, but Beliveau said later “a few words” in the room settled things for Game 7.

He didn’t get a point, but had one in every Montreal win in the series.

BATTING 1.000 May 20, 1975

In mentioning the Buffalo Sabres here, it was tempting not to include Rick Jeanneret’s frantic 1993 ‘May Day!’ overtime goal call against Boston. Except that happened April 24.

So let’s go with Jim Lorentz’s ‘Batman’ bop in Game 3 of the 1975 Cup final, which happened in less than a second, yet stayed in fans’ collective memory for decades.

A long evening began with Sabres starter Gerry Desjardins being pulled in favour of veteran Roger Crozier after three Philadelph­ia goals on six shots, then a haunting mist formed at the humid Buffalo Auditorium. A lone bat began dive-bombing the players and the crowd.

Lined up at left wing for a faceoff, Lorentz saw it coming and despite the erratic flight path, he brought it down with one high swipe of his stick. It landed dead at the feet of Flyers forward Rick MacLeish in the centre dot, who took off his glove and dumped the bat at his bench.

It wasn’t the only spooky moment of the evening. As the intense game dragged on in a rink with no air conditioni­ng, the temperatur­e reached around 30 C. The fog intensifie­d so much that timeouts were called for players to skate around to break it up, joined by arena workers, some wearing skates and business suits and waving bed sheets.

Late in the first OT period, Rene Robert scored the 5-4 winner, goalie Bernie Parent claiming he couldn’t see the puck through the pea soup. It was Buffalo’s first win of the series and Lorentz wound up being hailed by the locals for his deed, though criticized by some animal rights activists.

The rattled Flyers lost

Game 4 as well, but returned to the Aud to win the Cup in another fogbound Game 6. Incredibly, eight years later Lorentz would be present the next time an athlete got in hot water for killing wildlife during a game. He was in the Exhibition Stadium crowd the night Yankees outfielder Dave Winfield was charged for beaning a seagull.

CROSSING THE LINE May 24, 1980

The late Pat Quinn’s frequent pot shots at officials goes back to this game.

Two New York Islanders goals against his Philadelph­ia Flyers might have been retracted for being offside if today’s video technology was in place. At stake was the Cup in Game 6 of the final at Nassau Coliseum.

With the game at 1-1 early, a Clark Gillies drop pass to Butch Goring happened at full speed, but with naked eye evidence the puck was likely back over the blue line as Gillies kept going and Brent Sutter eventually scored.

Then in overtime, John Tonelli bobbled the disc at the line just enough that Bob Nystrom might have taken a step offside before receiving the pass on his 5-4 Cup-winning goal. The Flyers had trailed 4-2 in the game and fought back.

Conjecture on whether the match would’ve gone to OT had the first offside been examined or if the Flyers would’ve won a Game 7 continued for years. A Flyers win might also have misaligned the stars in what was the first of New York’s four straight Cups.

“Getting stiffed in Game 6 ... how could you ever forget that?,” Quinn said as coach of the Leafs during the 2002 Toronto-Isles conference semifinal at Nassau.

“It’s why I’ve developed such a paranoia about officiatin­g come playoff time.”

SWEET SURRENDER May 1, 1982

The inspiratio­n for Towel Power actually happened on April 29, but the cloth caper carried until May and into Canucks lore.

In Game 2 of the conference final between Vancouver and Chicago at the Stadium, perceiving a disallowed goal and minor penalties called against them meant the zebras were conspiring, the Canucks bench went ballistic.

Tiger Williams suggested coach Roger Neilson throw a bushel of spare sticks on the ice in protest, but the cerebral Neilson had a better idea. He stuck a white player sweat towel on the end of a stick and waved it in the direction of referee Bob Myers in mock surrender, a move emulated by a few of his players.

Neilson was ejected for the night and the team fined by the NHL, the irony being Neilson was already replacing Harry Neale when the latter was suspended for going after a fan in the crowd in Quebec City a month earlier.

When the Canucks flew home, citizens came out in droves to greet them with white towels. Forward Marc Crawford said he’d never forget the sight of pilots of a jet parked at the gate beside the Canucks charter waving theirs from the cockpit.

“And I remember people lined up way down Renfrew Ave. for tickets,” Crawford said.

With the white rags everywhere at PNE Coliseum, many sold by fast-buck artists stamped with the team logo, Game 3 looked like a Steelers football game. Vancouver won 4–3 and never looked back in the series.

DO’S AND DONUTS May 8, 1988

Yellow Sunday gave the NHL a black eye on Mother’s Day, with three 50-something officials in ill-fitting skates and garish coloured jerseys thrown into the middle of a bitter playoff series.

It began when Devils coach Jim Schoenfeld had a post-Game 3 run-in with referee Don Koharski at the Meadowland­s. Schoenfeld, bitter about the officiatin­g in 6-1 loss to Boston, was waiting for Koharski and linesmen Ray Scapinello and

Gord Broseker to come off the ice. Knowing the coach would be hot, the zebras stayed out until they thought it was safe. But Schoenfeld blocked Koharski with assistant coach Doug McKay getting in between. In the exchange, the ref tumbled to the floor.

Whether Koho was pushed or his skate blade caught something on the mat (McKay says to this day that’s the truth and that he’d grabbed the ref to stop him falling), he got to his feet warning Schoenfeld he was through in the NHL. That’s when Schoenfeld uttered the infamous “have another doughnut, you fat pig”.

The inability of anyone to find NHL president John Ziegler at that critical time, itself an embarrassi­ng sidebar, resulted in VP Brian O’Neill suspending Schoenfeld for Game 4 over the phone without a proper hearing. The Devils went to court and had that overturned, prompting the officiatin­g crew to refuse to work Game 4.

So an hour before puck drop, Devils goal judge Paul McInnis, a 52-year-old ice rink manager and amateur ref, was told by the league to find a whistle and his blades. Jim Sullivan, a 50-year-old cop, and Vic Godelski, a 51-year-old sales manager, also off-ice officials, also donned their yellow practice pinneys as linesmen.

When Jersey won a fightfille­d game, 3-1, and the replacemen­t officials were slow to keep up, the Bruins protested the result. That failed, though tempers eased and Koharski worked

Game 7, a 6-2 Boston win, without incident.

Koharski has noted Schoenfeld’s many public apologies since, as well as a letter of regret to his family. Years later, doughnut-loving ‘Officer Koharski’ was a minor character in Mike Myers’ first Wayne’s World movie.

BOSTON BLACKOUT May 24, 1988

Craig Simpson’s goal was lights out.

As in the illuminati­on at Boston Garden died just after the Oilers forward scored with 3:23 to go in the second period of Game 4 of the final. What became the last Cup championsh­ip game at the old Garden was delayed two hours, then eventually replayed in Edmonton, a four-game sweep that took five days.

After Simpson made it 3-3, a 4,000-volt switch overloaded on a transforme­r outside the 60-year-old rink, triggering the blackout. With viewers puzzled at suddenly watching graphics, Mike Emrick eventually came back on the ESPN broadcast to describe an eerie scene with dim lighting and traces of fog evident earlier in the hot evening.

With no power to the PA system, arena officials physically waved the 15,000 fans out for safety reason while Ziegler met with agitated GMs Sinden and Glen Sather on whether to finish the game, restage it in Boston or return to Edmonton. League bylaws and a Celtics playoff game the next night eventually gave Ziegler no choice but send everyone to Alberta.

“I’m not saying we’re happy with it, but we must live with it,” Sinden said. “It seems (the bylaw) was probably put in by some of the old-timers in the league to prevent someone from pulling a switch (deliberate­ly).”

A STICK IN TIME May 7, 1993

Before delving into why Wayne Gretzky wasn’t called for high-sticking Doug Gilmour in the conference final later in the month, credit to the Great One for potting his 19th game-winning playoff goal on this night against the Canucks. The unassisted tally came in the third period of a 7-4 Game 3 win over the Kings in the conference championsh­ip, giving L.A. a lead it never relinquish­ed, as Gretzky broke Maurice Richard’s record.

Three weeks later in the conference final, a trip to the final against Montreal for the winner, the Kings and Leafs were late in a tied and tense Game 6. Gretzky came out for a power play with Glenn Andersen in the box for Toronto. Swiping at a puck, No. 99 struck Gilmour’s chin in the follow through and drew blood, an automatic major and misconduct if verified. But referee Kerry Fraser and his linesmen huddled and decided none had a definitive look. Gretzky stayed around for the overtime winner, igniting the Great Western Forum in more ways than one.

“Either Gretzky’s stick hit Doug or the puck was fired up through the bottom of the ice,” Leafs executive Bill Watters fumed after.

That goal and a hat trick in Toronto two nights later, Gretzky’s eighth in post-season play, added to his game-winning goal record, but ended hopes of a classic Leafs-Canadiens final. At the home of Fraser’s parents in

Sarnia, Ont., an irate Leafs fan drove 160 kilometres from Kitchener to vandalize the family camper in the driveway until Fraser’s father chased him away with an axe.

Kerry acknowledg­ed the mistake and for years later did interviews to explain the circumstan­ces and urge fans to move on.

HE DIDN’T MESS UP May 25, 1994

New York’s rich sports history is full of bold prediction­s such as Babe Ruth’s called home run shot to Joe Namath’s Super Bowl boast.

So Mark Messier vowing the Rangers would come back to beat the New Jersey Devils in the Eastern Conference final wasn’t going to be ignored.

Losing two games to fall behind 3-2 with the ghosts of a 54-year Broadway Cup jinx rattling their chains at MSG, Messier enlivened the off day with his guarantee that the Rangers would stave off eliminatio­n on the road. Every newspaper up and down the Hudson River led their sports pages with his ‘We’ll win’ quote.

“I might have gone over the top this time,” Messier chuckled to teammate Kevin Lowe when they drove away from that practice.

Messier said he was trying to show the Rangers their captain believed in them, but it still took him scoring the tying, winning and empty netter in the third period. New York won Game 7 and then beat Vancouver for the Cup.

Another Ranger, Joey Kocur, said Messier’s famous line was actually meant for him in the dressing room as a confidence booster and a reporter overheard it. But once it was out there, Messier backed his words to the hilt.

NICK OF TIME May 10, 2016

“Bonino, Bonino, Bonino!” Hockey Night Punjabi broadcaste­r Harnarayan

Singh yelled the overtime winner’s name as loud as possible and a good thing he did to be heard over the goal horn and din in Pittsburgh. His delivery fit the dramatic goal, which eliminated the Washington Capitals in round two and came after Bonino thought he might have cost his team that Game 6 with a delay-of-game penalty not long before. In fact three Penguins had inadverten­tly put pucks in the crowd, but it was during Bonino’s middle sentence that Washington completed its three-goal come back to forced OT.

“It was the worst feeling I’ve ever had in hockey,” Bonino said of his gaffe. “Then (Ian Cole and Chris Kunitz) did it. That’s something you’ll never see.”

But in the fourth period, Bonino buzzed the net to bury a rebound and clinch the series. He also had an OT goal for Anaheim three years earlier and 18 playoff goals overall for four different teams. But this one sent the Pens to the first of their consecutiv­e Cups.

Singh and his game crew were invited to be in the

Pens’ championsh­ip parade where he replayed the famous Bonino goal call.

 ?? — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? Legendary defenceman Bobby Orr flies through the air in this iconic photo from May 10, 1970 after he scored the winning Stanley Cup goal to lead the Boston Bruins over the St. Louis Blues at Boston Garden.
— THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES Legendary defenceman Bobby Orr flies through the air in this iconic photo from May 10, 1970 after he scored the winning Stanley Cup goal to lead the Boston Bruins over the St. Louis Blues at Boston Garden.
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 ?? — CP FILES ?? Above: Jean Beliveau holds the Stanley Cup after the Montreal Canadiens defeated the Chicago Blackhawks
3-2 in Game 7 of the final series on May 18, 1971. Beliveau retired not long after as the Canadiens franchise scoring leader and as the league’s all-time playoff points holder. Left: New York Islanders’ Lorne Henning and Bobby Nystrom celebrate Nystrom’s game-winning overtime goal to clinch the team’s first Stanley Cup title, against the Philadelph­ia Flyers on May 24, 1980.
— CP FILES Above: Jean Beliveau holds the Stanley Cup after the Montreal Canadiens defeated the Chicago Blackhawks 3-2 in Game 7 of the final series on May 18, 1971. Beliveau retired not long after as the Canadiens franchise scoring leader and as the league’s all-time playoff points holder. Left: New York Islanders’ Lorne Henning and Bobby Nystrom celebrate Nystrom’s game-winning overtime goal to clinch the team’s first Stanley Cup title, against the Philadelph­ia Flyers on May 24, 1980.
 ?? — AP FILES ??
— AP FILES
 ?? — AP FILES ?? After his famous guarantee that the New York Rangers would rally to defeat the New Jersey Devils in the Eastern Conference final, captain Mark Messier led his team to a Stanley Cup victory over the Canucks in seven games.
— AP FILES After his famous guarantee that the New York Rangers would rally to defeat the New Jersey Devils in the Eastern Conference final, captain Mark Messier led his team to a Stanley Cup victory over the Canucks in seven games.
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